INTRODUCTION
 The first fascist dictator of the
20th century, Benito Mussolini, ruled Italy
between 1922 and
1944. |
Fascism is an oppressive political movement
that first developed in Italy after 1919, and then
in various countries in Europe, as a reaction to
the political and social changes brought about by
World War I. The name comes from the Latin word
fasces, meaning a bundle of rods tied around an
axe which symbolized authority in ancient
Rome.
The term "fascism" was first used in Italy by
the 1922-1924 government led by Benito Mussolini.
And the figure of a bundle of sticks tied around
an axe became the emblem of the first fascist
party. After Italy, fascist governments came to
power in Germany from 1933 to 1945, and in Spain
from 1939 to 1975. After World War II, dictatorial
regimes set up in South America and other
undeveloped countries were generally described as
fascist.
 A lictor from ancient Rome. He
walked in front of Roman magistrates and held a
bundle of rods in his hand as a symbol of power
and authority. |
To understand the philosophy of fascism, we may
consider the description that Mussolini wrote for
the Italian Encyclopedia in 1932:
Fascism, the more it considers
and observes the future and the development of
humanity quite apart from political considerations
of the moment, believes neither in the possibility
nor the utility of perpetual peace. It thus
repudiates the doctrine of Pacifism-born of a
renunciation of the struggle and an act of
cowardice in the face of sacrifice. War alone
brings up to its highest tension all human energy
and puts the stamp of nobility upon the peoples
who have courage to meet it. All other trials are
substitutes, which never really put men into the
position where they have to make the great
decision-the alternative of life or death.... [The
Fascist] conceives of life as duty and struggle
and conquest, but above all for others-those who
are at hand and those who are far distant,
contemporaries, and those who will come after.1
 Mussolini adopted the Roman axe to
symbolize his power. Above is an Italian
magazine of the time, entitled Il Fascismo
Scientifico (Scientific
Fascism). |
Evidently, the main idea behind fascism, as
stressed by Mussolini, is Darwinist conflict and
war. For, as we saw in the foreword, Darwinism
claims that "the strong survive, the weak are
eliminated," for which reason it suggests that
people need to be in a constant state of struggle
in order to survive. Fascism, having been
developed from this idea, promotes the belief that
a nation can only advance through war, and regards
peace as an element that retards progress.
The same line of thought was expressed by
Vladimir Jabotinsky, widely regarded as one of the
foremost representatives of Zionist Jews, and
proponent of the Israeli radical right, who summed
up the fascistic ideology in a statement he made
in the 1930s:
Stupid is the person who believes in his
neighbor, good and loving as the neighbor may be.
Justice exists only for those whose fists and
stubbornness make it possible for them to realize
it . . . Do not believe anyone, be always on
guard, carry your stick always with you-this is
the only way of surviving in this wolfish battle
of all against all.2
As is evident from these words, and as we shall
be seeing in some detail in the pages that follow,
fascism is actually an ideology that is set in
accordance with "the law of the jungle" as
developed by Darwinism.
 The axe and a bundle of rods
symbolizing fascism in an illustration with
Mussolini's
signature. | A nother feature of fascism to consider
is that it is a nationalistic and aggressive
ideology based on racism. This nationalism is far
removed from mere love of country. In the
aggressive nationalism of fascism, one aspires to
see his own nation dominating others, and utterly
humiliating them, and has no compunction about
inflicting great suffering upon its own people in
the process. Moreover, fascistic nationalism
consists of using war, occupation, massacre and
bloodshed as tools towards such political aims.
In the same manner as fascist regimes use such
means to dominate other nations, they also use
force and oppression against their own nation.
Fascism's basic social policy is insistence on an
idea, and obliging people to accept it. Fascism
aims at making individuals and all of society
think and behave in the same way. In order to
attain this end, it uses force and violence along
all kinds of methods of propaganda. It denounces
as an enemy anyone who does not comply with its
ideas, even going as far as genocide, as in the
case of Nazi Germany.
 Mussolini's Fascist Party emblem
and flags. A bundle of rods bound together
around an axe is the common form of fascist
emblems. |
The above has been just a brief description
of the nature of the social structure and
political structure of fascism. But the real
problem is in identifying where the idea of
fascism was born, how it then spread, came to
power, and took hold of entire nations. It is
important to understand these, because, although
people think that fascism was done away with at
the end of World War II, it still rears its head
in a number of forms. Fascism is not just a
political system, it is also a mentality, and even
if this mentality no longer leads to the
establishment of political regimes, such as Nazi
Germany, or Mussolini's Italy, it nevertheless
continues to inflict suffering on people all over
the world.
So we shall now examine the roots of the
fascist mentality, and how it was able to grow in
strength to the point of outraging the whole world
in the first half of the 20th century, and fill it
with suffering. |